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Re: On Parasitism and Double-Dipping



On Tue, 13 May 2008, Sandy Thatcher, President, American Association
of University Publishers [AAUP] wrote:

SH: And universities will of course use a portion of those windfall
savings to pay the publication costs of their own research output.
I wish I had as much faith as Stevan that the "of course" follows from his
preceding argument. The cynic in me says that it is just as likely that
universities will use the "windfall savings" to expand their football
stadiums!

Maybe universities in Britain act "rationally" in this way to move available
funds toward supporting research as a top priority. The history of higher
education in the U.S. suggests that this is not always the top priority that
probably everyone on this listserv would wish it to be.
Necessity is the Mother of Invention. The plain fact is that there is no necessity for universities to face this question now. And (unless it is an oxymoron or some other mis-trope to say so) there is no necessity to pre-empt that necessity, by "committing" to anything at all, in advance.

The academic rule -- and for research universities, it definitely trumps football fields, otherwise we are talking about the forces that trump research itself, and that's beyond both our reaches -- is Publish or Perish. Today, in the non-OA world, publishing is paid for by the subscriber university, not by the author university (though they are largely the same university).

Hence, the only thing missing today is OA (and perhaps football fields), not the university's unnecessary advance commitment to pay (journal) publishers for anything else at all. Journal publishers are being paid in full for what they are selling today, and the universities are the buyers. Anything more would simply be double-dipping at this time.

Self-archiving mandates are providing universities, their researchers and research with exactly what they are missing today: OA. OA (in case it is not already evident by now) is simply the natural online-age extension of Publish or Perish: The reason universities already mandate that their researchers have their research peer-reviewed and published is that unpublished, unvalidated research is no research at all: it leads to no benefits to anyone, neither knowledge fans nor football fans. Unvalidated, unpublished research, sitting in a desk drawer, may as well not have been done at all. No one can access it, use it, apply it, build upon it.

And research that may as well not have been done at all may as well not have been funded at all, by either the university or the tax-payer.

So we have Publish or Perish, and in the online age, we have Self-Archive to Flourish, because unnecessary access-barriers are unnecessary barriers to using, applying and building upon research. Toll-access today is just a bigger desk-drawer.

Toll-booths were necessary in the paper era, to pay the essential costs of generating and disseminating hard copies. (That -- plus peer review -- was what "publishing" meant, way back then.) But today, in the online era, the essential costs of making research accessible to any would-be user webwide reduce to just the costs of implementing peer review -- and those costs (and then some) are currently being paid in full by university journal subscriptions, thank you very much!

So Ian Russell (Chief Executive, ALPSP) is quite mistaken to call his old Alma Mater, the University of Southampton, a "parasite" for having been the first university in the world to adopt an "unfunded" Green OA self-archiving mandate (beginning with the mandate of Southampton's Department of Electronics and Computer Science in 2001, now university-wide).

What Southampton (and, since then, over twenty universities and departments, including, Harvard, twice) as well as over twenty research funding agencies (starting with the UK parliamentary Science and Technology Committee's mandate recommendation in 2003, and lately including ERC and NIH) have done in mandating Green OA for their own research output is not parasitic by any stretch -- while universities continue to pay the costs of publication through subscriptions. Indeed, such mandates could only be "funded" if universities were foolish enough to fund double-dipping by publishers (which Ian rightly disavows).

So, as I said, things would only begin to be parasitic if universities elected not to pay for the costs of publishing their own research *once those publishing costs were no longer being covered by subscriptions* (from *other* universities).

For if (research) universities elected to build football fields out of their windfall subscription cancellation savings even after the (hypothetical OA-induced) collapse of subscriptions as the means of covering the (sole remaining essential) cost of peer-reviewed journal publishing (i.e., peer review), then research, researchers, and research universities would simply perish: Publish or Perish.

If this extinction is indeed fated to happen, please blame football, force majeure, not OA, or university parasitism! But until and unless football really does prevail in the Academy [I'm not claiming it couldn't!], trust that if push ever comes to shove, the Publish or Perish Mandate itself will see to it that the pennies from the universities' windfall subscription cancellation savings that need to be redirected to pay for the true remaining costs of peer-reviewing their own research output can and will indeed be so redirected. Necessity is the Mother of Invention.

But the point is that there is no Necessity -- hence no Parasitism -- *now*.

Just a pressing need for universities to put a long-overdue end to their needless daily, weekly, monthly, yearly research impact loss, cumulating, foolishly, gratuitously, and irretrievably, since at least the 1990's.

This will of course all be obvious -- belatedly but blindingly -- to historians in hindsight. To quote the wag (in 1999, in an "Opinion piece [that did]... not necessarily reflect the views of D-Lib Magazine, the Corporation for National Research Initiatives, or DARPA"):

"I have a feeling that when Posterity looks back at the last decade
of the 2nd A.D. millennium of scholarly and scientific research on
our planet, it may chuckle at us..."
http://dlib.ejournal.ascc.net/dlib/december99/12harnad.html

So the big lesson that still remains to be learned is the universities': it is they (not publishers) who needlessly delayed (by well over a decade) adopting the natural PostGutenberg upgrade of their paper-era Publish or Perish Mandates to include the self-archiving of their own peer-reviewed research output, so as to maximize its usage and impact.

The only lesson journal publishers need to learn from this is that they are -- and always were -- merely service-providers for the universities, who are the research-providers, and paying (through the teeth) for the publishers' service, until further notice.

OA is obviously optimal for research, researchers and their institutions. The publishing tail needs to learn to stop trying to wag the research dog. Adapt to whatever is best for the research-providers and the symbiosis (not parasitism) will continue, as it was always destined to do.

Stevan Harnad
AMERICAN SCIENTIST OPEN ACCESS FORUM:
http://amsci-forum.amsci.org/archives/American-Scientist-Open-Access-Forum.html
http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/